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Walking the Dog is one of many musical numbers written in 1937 by George Gershwin for the score for the Fred Astaire – Ginger Rogers film Shall We Dance. In the film, the music accompanies a sequence of walking a dog on board a luxury liner. In 1960, the sequence was published as "Promenade".
The music of the Canary Islands reflects its cultural heritage. The islands used to be inhabited by the Guanches which are related to Berbers; they mixed with Spaniards, who live on the islands now. A variant of Jota is popular, as is Latin music, which has left its mark in the form of the timple guitar.
Dynamism of a Dog on a Leash (Italian: Dinamismo di un cane al guinzaglio), sometimes called Dog on a Leash [2] or Leash in Motion, [3] is a 1912 oil painting by Italian Futurist painter Giacomo Balla. [4] It was influenced by the artist's fascination with chronophotographic studies of animals in motion.
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Giacomo Balla, 1912, Dynamism of a Dog on a Leash (Dinamismo di un Cane al Guinzaglio), oil on canvas, 89.8 x 109.8 cm (35 3/8 x 43 1/4 in.), Albright–Knox Art Gallery, New York Source Albright–Knox Art Gallery. Date 1912 Author Giacomo Balla. Permission (Reusing this file) See below. Other versions
A well known drinking or bawdy song using the Cock of the North tune [7] is known as Aunty Mary. There are a great number of versions of varying degrees of obscenity. They nearly all share the same first two lines. One of the milder versions runs: Auntie Mary had a canary Up the leg of her drawers; She was sleeping, it was creeping, Up the leg ...
"Walking the Dog" (or "Walkin' the Dog") is a song written and performed by Rufus Thomas. [1] It was released on his 1963 album Walking the Dog . It was his signature hit and also his biggest, reaching number 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 in December 1963 and remaining on the chart for 14 weeks.
Associated with the environmentalist musical counterculture of the previous decade, animal rights songs of the 1970s were influenced by the passage of animal protection laws and the 1975 book Animal Liberation. [1] Paul McCartney has cited John Lennon's Bungalow Bill, released in 1968, as among the first animal rights songs. [2]